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Syncretism
(redirected from Synchretism)

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Syncretism 

(1) The absence of differentiation that characterizes an undeveloped state of certain phenomena. Examples are art during the initial stages of human culture, when music, singing, poetry, and the dance were not distinguished from one another, and a child’s mental functions during the early stages of its development.

(2) The blending or inorganic merging of heterogeneous elements. An example is the merging of different cults and religious systems in late antiquity— the religous syncretism of the Hellenistic period.

(3) In philosophy, syncretism denotes a variant of eclecticism.


Syncretism 

in linguistics, the merging of once formally distinct grammatical categories or meanings into one form, which, as a result, becomes polysemous or polyfunctional. In Latin, for example, syncretism in the case system led to a combining of the functions of the instrumental and locative cases in the ablative case. Syncretism can occur not only in the morphology but also in the syntax of a language. The concept of syncretism is paradigmatic, differing from the syntagmatic neutralization of oppositions. Syncretism is an irreversible systemic shift in the process of the development of a language; neutralization is a living process associated with the use of linguistic units in speech.



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The second edition included a chapter on pilgrimage and religious synchretism that was left out of the first edition because of length.
As Giles's volume amply demonstrates, in the two-hundred years of its greatest activity, from the fifteenth to the seventeenth centuries, the Inquisition was, in fact, continually redefining its concerns and its targets (from crypto-Judaizing, to alumbradismo, to bigamy, to dangerous racial diversity and religious synchretism in the New World).
 
 
 
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